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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in History

Dreaming Of Empire: Visions Of Rome And Imperialist Ideology In Twenty-First Century Cinema, Nathan Keckley Mar 2023

Dreaming Of Empire: Visions Of Rome And Imperialist Ideology In Twenty-First Century Cinema, Nathan Keckley

Undergraduate Research Symposium

The blockbuster film Gladiator kickstarted a new wave of ancient historical epics. Some of these, following Gladiator’s lead, drew explicit parallels between ancient Rome and contemporary America – notably Centurion (2010) and The Eagle (2011). The Rome-America analogy allowed Gladiator and its progeny to critique American society, and these critiques have received substantial scholarly attention. Given that these films were produced while America was waging controversial wars, it is unsurprising that one of the critiques they chiefly employ – and one of those scholars have most readily seized upon – is that of American imperialism. Gladiator, Centurion, and The Eagle …


Fa'amatagi: From Whence The Wind Blows, Annette Roberts Mar 2022

Fa'amatagi: From Whence The Wind Blows, Annette Roberts

Undergraduate Research Symposium

Fa’amatagi: From Whence the Wind Blows is a love letter to the people and culture of my parents. This is a documentary poetics project that draws upon research of the Mau Movement, archives from the New Zealand government, and personal ethnographies with my own parents who are both of Samoan descent. I curated several pieces of art from book collector Alexander Turnbull and photographer Alfred J. Tattersall. This project delves into the effects of colonialism on a previously isolated people. It explores the act of civil disobedience and what comes of it versus the long-lasting damage of compliance towards a …


Wear & Tear, Wymberley Davis Mar 2022

Wear & Tear, Wymberley Davis

Undergraduate Research Symposium

Wear & Tear is a documentary poetics project acknowledging and addressing the systematic policing, silencing, violence, and stripping of self-expression that women have suffered at the hands of cultural, societal, religious, and sexist norms. Wear & Tear is a hybrid research project which draws together mass culture archives and uses heterogenous sources like advertisements and juxtapose these with excerpts from sacred texts which seek to proscribe and circumscribe women’s clothing choices. It models itself on archival works such as Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee which works with image, language, and voice. My project presents a distinctly material cultural history …


Ideology In Stone: Re-Interpreting The Architecture Of Albert Speer For Contemporary Germany, Anna Rice, Allison Maleska Apr 2014

Ideology In Stone: Re-Interpreting The Architecture Of Albert Speer For Contemporary Germany, Anna Rice, Allison Maleska

Undergraduate Research Symposium

Many buildings built under the reign of Adolf Hitler with the purpose to aid the Nazi party’s political and ideological agenda are still in existence and located throughout present-day Germany. During a 2014 faculty-led MSU Study Abroad Tour, student investigators collected data about the work of Albert Speer. Speer, an infamous architect of these times, played a key role in the development of many structures important to the Nazi party. Speer’s intent was not only to influence the people of his time; he was planning the impact the buildings would have for generations to come. This poster will present how …


Deadly Medicine And World War Ii: Cautionary Insight Into Ethical Guidelines Left Unchecked, Annette Finley-Croswhite Feb 2014

Deadly Medicine And World War Ii: Cautionary Insight Into Ethical Guidelines Left Unchecked, Annette Finley-Croswhite

Undergraduate Research Symposium

Chair: Dr. Annette Finley-Croswhite, Department of History

Presenters: Jessica Madril, James Hennessey, Sarah Keck, Lindsey Northup, Elisa Hendrix


New Research In Renaissance And Baroque Art, Anne Muraoka Feb 2013

New Research In Renaissance And Baroque Art, Anne Muraoka

Undergraduate Research Symposium

Chair: Dr. Anne H. Muraoka, Department of Art History


The History Of Medicine: Benefits Derived From Exploring The Sciences Through The Lens Of The Humanities, Annette Finley-Croswhite Feb 2013

The History Of Medicine: Benefits Derived From Exploring The Sciences Through The Lens Of The Humanities, Annette Finley-Croswhite

Undergraduate Research Symposium

Chair: Dr. Annette Finley-Croswhite, Department of History